Lesson
8
Introducing the Wheel of the Year
The
Sabbats are seasonal festivals which mark the turning
of the Wheel of the Year and the cycles of nature.
Most western pagans celebrate eight sabbats; the Summer
and Winter Solstices, the Spring and Autumn Equinoxes
and the quarter days or fire festivals - Samhain,
Imbolc, Beltaine and Lughnasadh.
These sabbats help you tune in to the cycles of nature
as they exist within you as well as without. The idea
of the eight-fold Wheel of the Year was created by
Ross Nicholls and Gerald Gardner in the 1950's.
The
festivals themselves, however, are very old, and mark
important times in the agricultural cycle of the year.
All of the eight sabbats were celebrated in the ancient
world, but not all necessarily by the same people
or in the same place.
It should be remembered that the energies at different
times of the year are different depending on where
you are. If you are living in the southern hemisphere,
the seasons and therefore the festivals are reversed.
It
is important to try to learn what you can about the
myths, legends, beliefs and festivals of the land
you live in, to enable you to tune in to the natural
energies as perceived by the inhabitants of the land
through time.
SAMHAIN
- 31st OCTOBER
Samhain, or Halloween, is the death festival, marking
the descent of Winter. The leaves are falling from
the trees in drifts, and life is drawn away from the
surface of the earth, and descends deep into the earth.
Life is now in the roots and bulbs of plants which
rest over the Winter. The Horned God who was Lord
of Life and the Wild Greenwood has now truly taken
His throne as Lord of the Underworld, the dread Lord
of Shadows, the comforter of souls.
The
earth prepares for sleep and draws energy inwards.
This is a time for introspection, as we too draw our
energy within and prepare for the Winter. The Earth
is becoming cold, and barren, and we see Her as the
Cailleach, the Crone, the Wise One. She is the Dark
Mother who devours the God that She may give birth
to Him again. Her womb is also the tomb, and the Underworld,
and the Horned God thus resides within Her womb over
the Winter months.
Samhain
is a time of transformation and inner work. It is
also a sombre time of remembrance, when we remember
and honour those who have died. The veil is thinnest
between the worlds and we call on the spirits of the
dead and invite them to feast with us on this, the
feast of death. We call upon our ancestors and contact
the ancient wisdom. It is a time of endings, but also
a time of beginnings, as Samhain is a Celtic New Year's
Eve festival. Thus we give up the past and look to
the future, and it is also a good time for skrying.
It
is the end of one cycle and the beginning of another.
Samhain is a good time for banishings, and for sorting
out unfinished business. At Samhain we look back and
take stock of the past year and contemplate what we
have learned. Samhain is also the time to face our
shadow, the dark side of ourselves.
We
find no wild flowers blooming, yet the colours of
nature are rich and warm. Magick mushrooms grow to
help us explore other realms, to make the veil thinner
still. Samhain is also a harvest festival, but a harvest
of flesh. The livestock would be killed at this time
so that there would be meat throughout the bleak Winter.
The wind blows, Jack Frost makes patterns on our windows
and the mists rise. It is no wonder this season is
one of mystery.
THE
WINTER SOLSTICE: YULE - 21st DECEMBER
Yule is the time we celebrate the return of the waxing
sun. Light and life can be seen to be returning and
conquering death. Yule is a turning point, a point
of change, where the tides of the year turn and begin
to flow in the opposite direction. It is the darkest
time of the year, the time of the longest night, but
there is the promise of the return of light.
We
encourage the sun to rise and to grow in power, and
we remember the seasons of plenty. Magickally we bring
back the season of plenty, and we feast on rich foods
and drinks. The fir tree represents life amidst death,
it is evergreen, representing everlasting life, and
lasting friendship.
Holly
and Mistletoe bear berries at this time, symbolizing
fertility. Mistletoe berries are white, representing
the semen of the Horned God, the Holly berries are
blood red, symbolizing both the menstrual blood of
the Goddess and the sacrifice of the God. Evergreen
trees also represent youth and freshness, and are
symbols of the promise of spring. A yule custom, still
practised at Christmas is to dress an evergreen tree,
and make offerings.
We
honour the spirit of the tree, and what it represents.
It is sad that a custom of honouring the living tree
has been replaced by the meaningless decoration of
ghastly plastic or tinsel trees, or the cutting down
of thousands of living trees so that people can have
them in their living rooms for a couple of weeks,
and then dump them, causing environmental damage.
It is far better to honour a living tree, outdoors.
The
tree may be decorated with appropriate offerings,
fruit, decorated pine cones, jewellery, symbols of
the sun, symbols of fertility, birds, animals, etc.
At yule we say goodbye to the dying sun, and wait
through the long, cold night for the sun's rebirth.
The night belongs to the Goddess, and is a night of
waiting, through her pregnancy, for the Child of Promise.
In
the morning we greet the new sun and celebrate the
waxing year. The rising sun brings the promise of
the spring and the gifts that will bring. It is still
a long time before the sun will be strong, but we
hope and we trust. The sun is now the Child of Promise,
the young hero God. It is a time of making wishes
and hopes for the coming year, and of setting resolutions.
From the darkness comes light.
IMBOLC
or BRIDE - 1st FEBRUARY
The Festival of Imbolc or Bride, is celebrated around
2nd February by Pagans, and by Christians who call
it Candlemas. Imbolc is Irish- Gaelic, translated
variously as "in the belly" and "ewe's
milk", and represents the quickening of Light
and Life.
The
first stirrings of the coming of Spring can be seen,
as the first flowers (snowdrops and winter aconite)
begin to appear. Seeds which have lain dormant within
the Earth over the cold Winter months begin to stir
with life, as yet unseen. At Imbolc we celebrate the
Waking Light of the soul. Our spirits begin to quicken
as we anticipate the rebirth of Nature. In Wicca it
is the traditional time for initiation. Now is the
time for the banishing of Winter and the welcoming
of Spring. We welcome the Goddess Who is renewed,
reborn as the Flower Maiden. She has passed through
Her phase as the Hag, Crone or Wise One, and is a
Maiden again. Bride or Brigid is a three-fold Celtic
Goddess who has been christianized into St. Brigid,
whose day is celebrated on 1st February.
In
Ireland, St. Brigid's cross is made of rushes and
straw, and goes back to pre-Christian times, representing
the Sun Wheel or Fire Wheel. It may also be linked
to an ancient ceremony connected with the preparation
of the grain for sowing in the Spring. It was believed
that the Spirit of the Grain, or the Goddess Herself,
resided in the last grain harvested, and the last
grain from the Harvest Festival was ritually brought
into the house at Imbolc, blessed and planted as the
first seed of the next harvest.
The grain may also be made into a female figure, the
Brideog (little Brighde) and dressed. Bride's bed
is made, and She is welcomed in. The Goddess is seen
in Her three aspects at Imbolc, as the new-born Flower
Maiden; the Mother, or bride of fertility, awaiting
the fertilizing Sun God, and the Dark Crone of the
dark half of the year. The sun is growing in strength,
the Child of Promise, re-born at Yule, is now the
Conquering Child.
What
was born at the Solstice begins to manifest, and this
is the time for individuation, as we each light our
own light, and set ourselves tasks and challenges.
We nurture and kindle our resolutions and begin to
look outwards again, do outer activity, although first
we look deep within to discover what potential lies
there waiting to be fulfilled.
Through
the weeks ahead the days grow gradually longer, but
we are still in the dark half of the year (until Beltaine)
and this is the time to develop non-physical skills,
such as psychometry, clairvoyance and precognition.
EOSTRE:
THE SPRING EQUINOX - 21st MARCH
This festival is named after the Anglo-Saxon Goddess
Eostre or Eastre, also known in Old German as Ostara.
Little is known about this Goddess, except that her
festival was celebrated at the Spring Equinox, and
became Easter, and that She was a Goddess of fertility.
She was later connected with hares and eggs.
She may also be connected with the Greek Eos and the
Roman Aurora, both Dawn Goddesses, and with the Babylonian
Ishtar and Phoenician Astarte, both love Goddesses.
The
Anglo-Saxon lunar month, which became April, was called
Eastermonath. The equinox is a time both of fertility
and new life, and of balance and harmony. Light and
dark are here in balance, but the light is growing
stronger. It is a time of birth, and of manifestation.
Daffodils, tulips and crocuses are all in full bloom,
blossom appears on trees and catkins can be found
on the hazel and willow. Rites are best performed
at dawn or dusk, (but better at Dawn) that time between
light and dark.
The
days grow lighter and the earth grows warmer. As at
Imbolc, seeds may be blessed and planted. Seeds of
wisdom, understanding, and magickal skills may also
be planted. Eggs may be used for the creation of talismans,
or ritually eaten. The egg is a symbol of rebirth,
and its yolk represents the sun, its white, the Goddess.
Egg production in hens is stimulated when the bird's
retina is stimulated by more than 12 hours of light,
thus more eggs are produced after the equinox.
This
is a time both of growth and of balance, and we may
work on balancing ourselves and the subtle energies
within us, such as our chakras, the inner masculine
and feminine qualities, the light and dark aspects,
etc. The equinox is also the time of Persephone's
return from the underworld, to re-unite with Her mother
Demeter, making the earth green again.
This
is the time of spring's return, the joyful time, the
seed time, when life bursts forth from the earth and
the chains of winter are broken. It is a time of balance
when all the elements within must be brought into
new harmony. The Prince of the Sun reaches out His
hand, and the Kore, the maiden, returns from the dark
underworld. Where they dance, wild flowers appear,
sorrow turns to joy, and scarcity turns to abundance.
BELTAINE
- 1st MAY
The Spiral Dance Beltaine (also spelled Bealteinne,
Bealtaine and various other ways) is the beginning
of the Celtic Summer, the light season of the year.
Like Samhain, it is a time when the veil is thin between
the worlds, a time to communicate with spirits, particularly
at this time nature spirits. In Irish Gaelic, Bealtaine
is the name of the month of May.
In
Scottish Gaelic Bealtuinn means May Day. The word
originally meant "Bel Fire", and Beltane
is associated with the Celtic God Bel, also known
as Balor or Belenus. Bel is a God of Light and Fire
and has been equated with the Greek Apollo, and associated
with the Sun, although He is not specifically a Sun
God. Fires were traditionally built at Beltane, and
people would jump over the fire. Young, unmarried
people would leap the bonfire and wish for a husband
or wife, young women would leap it to ensure their
fertility and couples leap it to strengthen a bond.
Cattle
were driven through the ashes or between two Beltane
fires to ensure a good milk yield. The maypole, still
used in Mayday festivities, represents both the phallus
and the Goddess. It is also the World Tree connecting
the three Worlds, its root in the Underworld, its
branches in the Heavens. The shaman`s spirit may travel
between the realms via the World Tree, and the phallus
is also connected with life, love and death.
The
phallus and the World Tree may be seen as two aspects
of the God in His relationship to the Goddess in His
cycle of birth, death and rebirth. The May Queen is
still elected in many village May Day festivals, although
the May King is largely left out these days (apart
from in Pagan circles). The May King is the Green
Man, and was often covered entirely with leaves.
The
mating of the Green Man with the Goddess as Queen
of May was a magickal act considered necessary for
the fertility of the Earth. Beltane is a time of fertility
and is also an excellent time for Handfastings, the
couple enacting the HeirosýÓgamos, or
sacred marriage. The Hawthorn tree (also called the
May tree) blossoms at this time, and we are in the
Hawthorn month. The blossoms can be gathered, and
a delicious wine made from them, to be drunk the following
Beltane. Celebrate Beltane by taking pleasure in life
and enjoying the gifts of the Goddess.
LITHA:
SUMMER SOLSTICE - 21st JUNE
At the Summer Solstice the sun is at its highest and
brightest and the day is at its longest. The Lord
of Light has fought the powers of darkness, and is
triumphant, ensuring fertility in the land. But in
so doing so, He sows the seeds of His own death. The
Wheel turns and the Dark God (the Holly King) begins
to wax in power as the Light God (Oak King) wanes.
The
Goddess shows Her Death- in-Life aspect, the Earth
is fertile, and all is in bloom, the Goddess reaches
out to the fertilizing Sun God at the height of His
powers. At the same time She presides over the death
of the God. The Goddess dances Her dance of Life and
Death, the Sun God loves Her, and dies of His love.
The Summer Solstice is a time of fulfilment of love.
Flowers
are in bloom everywhere, i.e. in sexual maturity,
ready for pollination, fertilization, yet once fertilized
they die that the seeds and fruits may develop. At
the same time, summer fruits appear, for a short but
delicious season.
June
was considered by some to be the luckiest month to
be married in, and is the time of the mead moon, or
honey moon. A tradition was for newly weds to drink
mead daily for a month after their wedding, hence
the post wedding holiday being named the honeymoon.
Although the days begin to grow shorter after the
Summer Solstice, the time of greatest abundance is
still to come. The promises of the Goddess and God
are still to be fulfilled.
This
is a time of beauty, love, strength, energy, rejoicing
in the warmth of the sun, and the promise of the fruitfulness
to come. It seems a carefree time, yet in the knowledge
of life, is the knowledge of death, and beauty is
but transitory. We celebrate life, and the triumph
of light, but acknowledge death, and the power of
the Dark Lord which now begins to grow stronger.
At
this time of year, our physical energy is generally
at its peak, and we are active and strong. Games involving
a show of strength, such as tug of war, wrestling,
etc. are appropriate here, and are often staged at
summer fayres. This can be considered a remnant of
pagan customs involving the battle between the light
and dark Gods.
LUGHNASADH
- 1st AUGUST
Lughnasadh or Lammas is celebrated on August eve or
August 1st and is the festival of the first of the
harvests. Lammas is the Anglo-Saxon name for the festival,
meaning Loaf mass. Lughnasadh is the festival of Lugh,
a Celtic God of Light and Fire and God of crafts and
skills. His Welsh form is Llew Law Gyffes, and in
the Mabinogion story of Blodeuwidd and Llew, the theme
of Llew as the sacrificed God can be seen (we need
of course to consider the pre-Christian origins of
the story).
Gronw
can be seen as the Dark God of the Waning year, and
Llew as the Bright Lord of the Waxing year, Blodeuwidd
represents the Goddess in Her Flower Maiden aspect.
Lammas or Lughnasadh then has the theme of the sacrificed
God of the harvest, but he is sacrificed and transformed,
rather than descending into the underworld to become
Lord of Death, which comes later in the year.
Lammas
is a time of the fullness of Life, and a celebration
of the bountiful earth. It is a time of the sacrificial
mating of Goddess and God, where the Corn King, given
life by the Goddess and tasting of Her love is sacrificed
and transformed into bread and ale which feeds us.
The main themes of Lammas may therefore be seen as
thanksgiving to the Goddess for Her bountiful harvest,
stating our hopes for what we wish to harvest (for
Lammas is the very beginning of the harvest), sacrifice,
transformation, and a sharing of the energy of the
Corn King.
MODRON:
THE AUTUMNAL EQUINOX - 21st SEPTEMBER
The two equinoxes are times of equilibrium. Day and
night are equal and the tide of the year flows steadily,
but whilst the Spring Equinox manifests the equilibrium
before action, the Autumnal Equinox represents the
repose after action, the time to take satisfaction
in the work of the summer and reap its benefits.
The
Autumnal Equinox is celebrated on 21st September,
and is the second harvest festival, with the fruit
being gathered in. We celebrate the abundance of the
earth, and make wine from the excess fruit, to preserve
the richness of the fruits of the earth to give us
joy throughout the year.
This
is the time of the Vine. The God, who was Lord of
the Greenwood in the summer and the Corn King at Lughnasadh
now dances His last dance upon the earth, as Dionysus,
God of wine, music and dance, before making his descent
to the underworld to take up his role as Dread Lord
of Shadows. The Lord of Light, the Sun King, His power
waning, exists briefly in balance with the Dark Lord
before giving way to the growing power of darkness,
but the power of the sun is encapsulated in the grape
and the fruits of the earth.
The
wine will remind us of his power throughout the year.
The leaves falling from the trees and rotting into
the earth are a reflection of the Horned God's journey
from the Greenwood to the underworld, deep into the
womb of the Mother, where He will reside until He
begins to emerge with the new green shoots in the
spring. The Autumnal Equinox marks the completion
of the harvest, and thanksgiving, with the emphasis
on the future return of that abundance.
The
Eleusinian mysteries took place at this time, during
which the initiate was said to have been shown a single
ear of grain with the words "In silence is the
seed of wisdom gained". The themes then of the
Autumnal Equinox are the completion of the harvest,
the balance of light and dark, and of male and female,
and an acknowledgement of the waning power of the
sun and the waxing power of the Dark Lord.
Exercise
8
Write down the following questions in your magickal
diary and then work through them one by one, you can
draw on the material given or use other reference
material, remember the more work you put in, the more
you will get out of your work so do take your time!
a)
When is the next Sabbat? Which one is it? Explain
what this sabbat and the time of the year mean to
you and how it affects your environment.
b) Describe the aspects of the Goddess at the different
sabbats/seasons.
c)
Go to a nearby forest or park and gather any items
such as leaves, flowers, etc that represent the current
season. These items can be put on a shrine if you
have one. You can also draw pictures or make something
which represent the current season for your own shrine
or alter.
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